¡Acompáñanos a viajar por el mundo de los libros!
Añadir este libro a la estantería
Grey
Escribe un nuevo comentario Default profile 50px
Grey
Suscríbete para leer el libro completo o lee las primeras páginas gratis.
All characters reduced
Roughing It - cover

Roughing It

Mark Twain

Editorial: CLXBX

  • 0
  • 0
  • 0

Sinopsis

"Roughing It" by Mark Twain is a lively, humorous, and vividly detailed account of the author's adventures in the American West during the mid-19th century. Blending memoir, travel writing, and tall-tale storytelling, Twain chronicles his experiences as a young man seeking fortune and purpose amid the raw energy of frontier life.

Beginning with Twain's journey by stagecoach from Missouri to Nevada, the book captures the excitement, danger, and absurdity of westward expansion. Twain recounts encounters with colorful characters, prospectors, outlaws, journalists, and dreamers, bringing to life the mining camps, desert landscapes, and boomtowns of Nevada and California. His misadventures in silver mining, brief military service, and early days as a newspaper writer form the heart of the narrative.

Beyond the American West, Roughing It also follows Twain to Hawaii (then the Sandwich Islands), where his keen observations and playful humor illuminate island life, local customs, and natural wonders. Throughout the book, Twain's storytelling blends exaggeration with truth, creating a uniquely entertaining portrait of frontier America.

While often laugh-out-loud funny, Roughing It also offers valuable insights into the spirit of ambition, risk, and reinvention that defined the era. Twain captures the optimism and chaos of a rapidly expanding nation, while subtly critiquing greed, folly, and the myth of easy success.

Energetic, observant, and irresistibly entertaining, Roughing It stands as one of Mark Twain's most beloved nonfiction works. It is an essential read for fans of classic American literature, travel memoirs, and stories of adventure on the wild frontier.
Disponible desde: 06/02/2026.
Longitud de impresión: 540 páginas.

Otros libros que te pueden interesar

  • Dance or Die - From Stateless Refugee to International Ballet Star A MEMOIR - cover

    Dance or Die - From Stateless...

    Ahmad Joudeh

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A Syria-born dancer offers his deeply personal story of war, statelessness, and the pursuit of the art of dance in this inspirational memoir. 
     
      
     
    Dance or Die is an autobiographical coming-of-age account of Ahmad Joudeh, a young refugee who grows up in Damascus with dreams of becoming a dancer. When he is recruited by one of Syria's top dance companies, neither bombs nor family opposition can keep him from taking classes, practicing hard, and becoming a Middle Eastern celebrity on a Lebanese reality show. Despite death threats if Ahmad continues to dance, his father kicking him out of the house, and the war around him intensifying, he persists and even gets a tattoo on his neck right where the executioner's blade would fall that says, "Dance or Die." 
     
      
      
    A powerful look at refugee life in Syria, Dance or Die tells of the pursuit of personal expression in the most dangerous of circumstances and of the power of art to transcend war and suffering. It follows Ahmad from Damascus to Beirut to Amsterdam, where he finds a home with one of Europe's top ballet troupes, and from where he continues to fight for the human rights of refugees everywhere through his art, his activism, and his commitment to justice.
    Ver libro
  • Lost & Found - A Story of Redemption and Self-Discovery - cover

    Lost & Found - A Story of...

    Christopher Buckingham

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    To the lost who want to be found. 
    For the dreamers who envision more than what they were given. 
    For the believers who see signs in things that don't always meet the eye. 
    And for the blind searching for their way... 
    Lost & Found: A Story of Redemption and Self-Discovery is about a boy from Queens, born out of wedlock. 
    Many of us enter this world without a solid foundation beneath our feet. 
    Litigation, fights, and a love that turned sour transformed an innocent child into a broken boy. 
    Voiceless and searching for himself, Christopher Buckingham walks his path in silence. 
    Swallowing every scream and clutching the pain left behind by childhood trauma. 
    Yet through that darkness, he begins to discover healing, purpose, and love, forging his own rite of passage on the road from broken to whole.
    Ver libro
  • "F*** the Pauls" - Written by Their Mother - cover

    "F*** the Pauls" - Written by...

    Pam Stepnick

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    We are in the era of the Pauls. Love them or hate them, you can't ignore them. Welcome to our Universe. 
    I’ve never personally said the words “F*** the Pauls”... but plenty of people have. My sons have spun this mantra into multimillion dollar empires. To me, it captures the wild and often chaotic era we live in, and how my sons turned some of their biggest losses into their most legendary wins. 
    Before they were stepping into boxing rings, wrestling in the WWE, and breaking the internet with viral stunts, Jake and Logan Paul were just two kids from Ohio with big dreams and a camcorder. As their mother, I’ve seen it all—the highs, the heartbreaks, the headlines, and the hate. Faith in God, unshakable positivity, and a whole lot of resilience haven’t just helped me hold on to hope for my family, they’ve kept me sane in a digital era which is a dangerous place. 
    This is the story of what really happens when your kids become famous overnight, when the internet turns against you, and when you have to hold on for dear life as your kids build empires, battle legends, and redefine entertainment as we know it. 
    Part memoir, part cautionary tale, “F*** the Pauls” is an unfiltered look at our journey—the struggles, the triumphs, and the lessons I’ve learned along the way. So buckle up, because life in the Paul household is anything but boring.
    Ver libro
  • Frederick Douglass and Harriet Tubman: The History of the Most Influential Black Activists in 19th Century America - cover

    Frederick Douglass and Harriet...

    Charles River Editors

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    With the possible exception of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., no African American has been more instrumental in the fight for minorities’ civil rights in the United States than Frederick Douglass, an American social reformer, orator, writer and statesman. His list of accomplishments would be impressive enough even without taking into account the fact that he was born into slavery.  
    	Douglass was born into slavery, and it’s believed his father was a white man, even perhaps his master Aaron Anthony. When Douglass was about 12, his slaveowner’s wife, Sophia Auld, began teaching him the alphabet in defiance of the South’s laws against teaching slaves how to read. When her husband Hugh found out, he was furious, reminding her that if the slave learned to read, he would become dissatisfied with his condition and desire freedom. Those words would prove prophetic. 
    	Douglass is noted as saying that "knowledge is the pathway from slavery to freedom,” and he took that advice to heart, teaching himself how to read and write with his knowledge of the alphabet. On September 3, 1838, Douglass successfully escaped slavery, traveling by boat to Delaware, Philadelphia, and finally New York, all in the span of a day. Douglass found a “new world had opened upon me.” 
    	Harriet Tubman is one of the most famous women in American history, and from an early age every American learns of her contributions to abolition and the Underground Railroad. The woman who became known as the Moses of her people personally led more than 13 expeditions to free slaves in the South, and she was so integral in helping escaped slaves achieve freedom that her name is practically synonymous with the Underground Railroad today.  
    	If anything, the central role she played in the Underground Railroad has become so ingrained among subsequent generations that Tubman’s life has been shrouded in legend, and other important aspects have been overlooked.
    Ver libro
  • 170 Chinese Poems - cover

    170 Chinese Poems

    Arthur Waley

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    A selection of the very best of Chinese poetry over the course of a thousand years, from 100 years before Christ was born up of the middle ages. Arthur Waley's translations of Chinese poetry are still the benchmark by which such translations are held, nearly two hundred years after he introduced the west to the wonder of classical Chinese poetry.Includes Waley's interpretations of poems originally by Altun, Fu Hsüan, Ch‘U Yüan, Ch’ēn Tzŭ-Ang, Ch’ēng-Kung Sui, Ch’ien Wēn-Ti, Ch’in Chia, Ch’ü Yüan, Chan Fang-Shēng, Chang Tsai, Chi K’ang, Hsieh T’iao, Hsü Ling, Li Fu-Jēn, Li Po, Liu Hsün’s Wife, Lu Yu, Lu Yün, Miu Hsi, Ou-Yang Hsiu, Pao Chao, Po Chü-I, Po Hsing-Chien, Su Tung-P’o, Sung Yü, T’ao Ch’ien, Tao-Yün, Ts’ao Chih, Ts’ao Sung, Tsang Chih, Tso Ssŭ, Tzŭ-Yeh, Wang Chi, Wang Chien, Wang Wei, Wei Wēn-Ti, Wu-Ti, Yüan Chen, Yüan Chieh, &Yüan-Ti
    Ver libro
  • Pardon Power - How The Pardon System Works And Why - cover

    Pardon Power - How The Pardon...

    Kim Wehle

    • 0
    • 0
    • 0
    If you've ever wondered about the constitutional basis for presidential pardons, this book explains it, offering examples from the recent and distant past. Follow constitutional law professor and popular newsroom commentator Kim Wehle through a fascinating rundown of how this executive power has been—and might be—used by American presidents.
    Ver libro